EVENTS

Film and War Memories in Asia: Blue Swallow

November 13, 2008 - 5:15pm

Philippines Conference Room, Encina Hall, 3rd Floor

This is the second phase of a three year research effort to compare the formation of the divided memories in Japan, China, South Korea, Taiwan and the United States. We will conduct a comparative study of popular cinema dealing with historical subjects focusing roughly on the period from 1931-1951.
This is the second in a series of 4 film screening which will be followed by a discussion of the audience.
Sponsored by Shorenstein APARC, the Japan Policy Research Institute at USF Center for the Pacific Rim and the Center for East Asian Studies at Stanford University.
Blue Swallow synopsis
An aspiring Japanese aviator longing to take flight from Japanese-occupied Korea enrolls in Tachikawa Flight Academy in director Yoon Jong-chan's lavish look at the life of pre-World War II aviatrix Park Gyeong-weon. Raised in the Korean countryside but longing to embrace her Korean heritage, Park Gyeong-weon (Jang Jin-yeong) longs to take to the sky "like a swallow." Park is convinced that she has what it takes to soar through the clouds, and in 1925 she begins to pursue her dreams by enrolling in the Tachikawa Flight Academy. An amiable cab driver by day, the tomboyish aeronaut eventually strikes up a close friendship with fellow Koreans Kang Se-gi (Kim Tae-hyeok) and Lee Jeong-heui (Han ji-men) while entering into a tenuous romance with handsome student Han Ji-hyeok (Kim Ju-hyeok). High up in the sky Park attempt to hold her own against airborne Nipponese nemesis Masako Gibe (Yuko Fueki), and as tensions begin to heat up between Japan and Korea the skillful pilot plans a high-profile "friendship" flight to Manchuria in hopes of encouraging peaceful relations between the two countries. - Jason Buchanan,

Free and open to the public.
RSVP REQUIRED by 11/12 at:
http://aparc.stanford.edu/events/registration/5471/

Event Sponsor:

Sponsored by Shorenstein APARC, the Japan Policy Research Institute at USF Center for the Pacific Rim and the Center for East Asian Studies at Stanford University.